The Immortalists

By: Chloe Benjamin

Fiction. Fantasy. Historical Fiction. Death & Grief.

 
 

Let’s begin here: four young siblings in 1969’s Manhattan, sneak away to find the mysterious fortune teller they’ve heard whispers of who can prophesize the date of your death.

So spins the sweeping tale of the Gold children as they move through their lives haunted by the fortune teller’s prophecy. Simon, the youngest child, abandons high school following the shocking loss of his father and absconds to the mecca of 1980’s San Francisco where he searches for love. Next oldest, Klara, shuffles off societal expectations to chase her dream of becoming a magician. Blending the liminal spaces between life and death, real and unreal, she wonders if death really ends the relationship with the beloved and if she can escape her own death to be reunited with those she misses most. Oldest brother, Daniel, seeks structure and security as a military doctor in post-9/11 America but following a suspension, he becomes obsessed with finding the fortune teller who so impacted his family. Are her prophecies scams or portals? Eldest, Varya, is our final chapter of this family saga. Saddled with untreated OCD, she has dedicated her life to longevity research, determined to outsmart and outrun the death that has haunted her family since the prophecy. But is there any point to avoiding death if you aren’t fully living?

Check out Bevival’s Long Before the End discussion of Chloe Benjamin’s majestic work of family, love, death, grief, and of course, magic.

There is nothing subtle about the themes of death and grief in this book of popular fiction. From the first pages until the last, you’ll be considering your own mortality and your relationship with it. Even now, I’m wondering if I’d want to know the date of my death, if that knowledge would push me to do the thing, seek the dream, live more intensely or if it’d slowly chip away at the mystery which grounds me, the magic of not knowing, the grace of liminality.

Pick up this majestic work, Chloe Benjamin’s The Immortalists and fall into the lives of the Gold siblings as you skip across America from the Lower East Side to San Francisco’s Haight-Asbury with a few stops in Vegas as you span five decades of the sweeping story of family, love, death, grief, and of course, magic.

The Farewell Library is where Jade blends her love of literature with her passion for death literacy and grief awareness. Jade offers a monthly Death & Grief-focused virtual book club, book reviews of the latest Death and Grief centered books and tips and tricks for aspiring death workers and others standing at the sacred thresholds of death and grief. Please support this series by ordering from Bookshop.org